Golf | US PGA Tour

Spieth 'excited' as Cup heats up

Two runner-up finishes in the US PGA Tour's FedEx Cup playoffs have only whetted Jordan Spieth's appetite for a victory at this week's BMW Championship.

The third leg of the playoffs tees off on Thursday at Conway Farms near Chicago.

His two second-place finishes in the first two legs of the four-tournament series have Spieth atop the playoff standings – with the series winner after the concluding Tour Championship lifting the FedEx Cup and its $10 million bonus.

"Very excited," Spieth said on Wednesday. "I'm in a great position, looking to obviously stay in the No 1 spot. The FedEx Cup is a tremendous accomplishment, something I’m certainly striving for."

At 24, Spieth already has the 2015 FedEx Cup on his resume, along with three major titles – the most recent at this year's British Open.

His friend and fellow 24-year-old Justin Thomas, who won his first major at the PGA Championship in August, beat Spieth to the Dell Championship title in Massachusets two weeks ago and comes into Conway Farms second in the standings, 27 points behind Spieth.

World No 1 Dustin Johnson who beat Spieth in a playoff in the Northern Trust, the opening playoff event in August, admitted that tussling with the likes of Spieth and Thomas, not to mention 25-year-old Hideki Matsuyama and 22-year-old Spaniard Jon Rahm, can have him feeling all of his 33 years.

"I wouldn’t say I feel old, but yeah, I'm the oldest, for sure," said Johnson, currently third in the Cup standings ahead of Matsuyama and Rahm.

"They’re really good players at a very early age," Johnson said. "I like seeing it. The game needs it, and it pushes me to keep working harder. So I like it."

Any player in the top five in the standings can claim the bonus with a victory in the Tour Championship – and only the top 30 players will advance to the season finale in Atlanta.

"I've won a major," 2016 US Open champion Johnson said. "I haven’t won the FedEx Cup. To me, they pretty much go hand-in-hand. It's a big tournament where we get paid very, very well if we win. So it means a lot."